Hi Widewing,
>(Since the P-80A Shooting Star was in squadron service (with the 29th, 31st and 445th Fighter Squadrons) well before the end of the war, some might argue that it qualifies as a WWII fighter.
From "Fighter Pilot's Heaven" by Donald S. Lopez:
"After a great deal of testing and modifying, there were four P-80s overseas - two in England and two in Italy - in 1945, but a tragic accident involving one of them cause them to be grounded. Maj. Fred Borsodi, an experienced Wright Field test pilot, was demonstrating one of the 80s in England when, unknown to him, a fire started in the engine compartment. The aft section of the airplane burned off, and he was killed."
(I think for most of 1945 and '46, the P-80 was either grounded or subject to serious restrictions, getting hardly any air time.)
Lopez was an Eglin Air Force Base test pilot who was tasked with the operational suitability trials of the P-80. His first flight in the P-80 was in February 1946.
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)